Tom Wescott and Mike Covell will release two of the best suspect related books ever.
I have a hunch ( said Quasimodo ), I have a hunch that Tom has accumulated a lot on Le Grand that people haven't thought of before....and Mike, being the researcher he is, will unleash a superior quality work as well.

Thanks, Howard. Alas, there will be no Le Grand book THIS year. And yes, there is a lot known about Le Grand, although from my perspective there is still far too little known. A lot of what is known is scattered piecemeal across here and Casebook, and still more stuff has never been posted. But I'm looking forward to the day when I can bring it all together into some readable and narrative fashion in my unbiased and agenda-free book titled The Absolutely Essentially Complete True Final Ultimate Case Closed. I had to cut the name 'Jack the Ripper' from the title due to space constraints.

I understand where you're coming from, How, but here is some things that are of interest... albeit unconventional per se... Le Grande is, what to any historical researcher sees... a sleeper, for the lack of a better term, but with that inquisitive aspect it wants you to know more. I don't know if Charles Le Grande killed any women in the series known as the Whitechapel murders, but I believe he influenced the investigation in a way previously not conceived by many students of this case. He was a con artist who took advantage of a situation for his own benefit. I have no doubt. We have yet to see how much more that might encompass.

__________________
Best Wishes,
Cris Malone
______________________________________________"Objectivity comes from how the evidence is treated, not the nature of the evidence itself. Historians can be just as objective as any scientist."

I understand where you're coming from, How, but here is some things that are of interest... albeit unconventional per se... Le Grande is, what to any historical researcher sees... a sleeper, for the lack of a better term, but with that inquisitive aspect it wants you to know more. I don't know if Charles Le Grande killed any women in the series known as the Whitechapel murders, but I believe he influenced the investigation in a way previously not conceived by many students of this case. He was a con artist who took advantage of a situation for his own benefit. I have no doubt. We'll see how much more that might encompass.